Abstract

Asbtract We performed tsunami waveform inversions for the Bengkulu, southern Sumatra, earthquake on September 12, 2007 (M w 8.4 by USGS). The tsunami was recorded at many tide gauge stations around the Indian Ocean and by a DART system in the deep ocean. The observed tsunami records indicate that the amplitudes were less than several tens of centimeters at most stations, around 1 m at Padang, the nearest station to the source, and a few centimeters at the DART station. For the tsunami waveform inversions, we adopted 20-, 15- and 10-subfault models. The tsunami waveforms computed from the estimated slip distributions explain the observed waveforms at most stations, regardless of the subfault model. We found that large slips were consistently estimated at the deeper part (>24 km) of the fault plane, located more than 100 km from the trench axis. The largest slips of 6–9 m were located about 100–200 km northwest of the epicenter. The deep slips may have contributed to the relatively small tsunami for its earthquake size. The total seismic moment is calculated as 4.7 × 1021 N m (M w = 8.4) for the 10-subfault model, our preferred model from a comparison of tsunami waveforms at Cocos and the DART station.

Highlights

  • An earthquake off the south coast of Bengkulu, southern Sumatra (4.520◦S, 101.374◦E, Mw 8.4 at 11:10:26 UTC according to USGS) on September 12, 2007 generated a tsunami that resulted in 25 fatalities and 92 injured (41 severe and 51 minor) in Bengkulu and West Sumatera Provinces (International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, 2007)

  • We report here our calculation of tsunami waveform inversions to reveal the tsunami source of the 2007 Bengkulu earthquake

  • The total seismic moments are calculated from these slip distributions as 5.1 × 1021 N m (Mw = 8.4), 4.8 × 1021 N m (Mw = 8.4), and 4.7 × 1021 N m (Mw = 8.4) for the 20, 15, and 10-subfault model, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

An earthquake off the south coast of Bengkulu, southern Sumatra (4.520◦S, 101.374◦E, Mw 8.4 at 11:10:26 UTC according to USGS) on September 12, 2007 generated a tsunami that resulted in 25 fatalities and 92 injured (41 severe and 51 minor) in Bengkulu and West Sumatera Provinces (International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, 2007). Ji (2007a) and Yamanaka (2007) found a major asperity at a depth around 30 km, while Yagi (2007) and Vallee (2007a) estimated a similar asperity and an additional one located in a deeper area. About a half day after the mainshock, the largest aftershock (Mw 7.9 according to USGS) occurred approximately 250 km north of the mainshock’s epicenter; this generated a tsunami. Tsunami surveys made immediately after the earthquake along approximately 300 km of the coast of southern Sumatra reported tsunami heights of up to about 4 m (Borrero et Copyright c The Society of Geomagnetism and Earth, Planetary and Space Sciences (SGEPSS); The Seismological Society of Japan; The Volcanological Society of Japan; The Geodetic Society of Japan; The Japanese Society for Planetary Sciences; TERRAPUB

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